this post was submitted on 08 Nov 2023
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The root of what’s going on here can feel obvious: blame inflation, which picked up in mid-2021 and throughout 2022. But that isn’t really the issue anymore, at least not at the current rate, because inflation is coming down. The actual problem here is prices.

They’re not going up nearly as much as they were in, say, the middle of last year, but they’re by and large not declining en masse, either. And in most cases, they won’t get back to where they were in the Before Times.

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[–] billwashere 71 points 8 months ago (5 children)

Still think this is just greedflation. Raising prices because you can. Not because of rising labor costs, supply chain problems, inflation., etc. That might have been true at the start of the pandemic, but it isn’t now. Want an example, streaming prices. There is no reason for increases except greed.

[–] [email protected] 24 points 8 months ago

Been saying this for a while. It's off that all these companies raised prices and also started seeing record breaking profits in the same year. Almost like they didn't really need to raise them all that much or at all.

[–] Tikiporch 12 points 8 months ago

They say as much in the article, companies are basically bragging about it at this point. They keep raising prices and we keep buying anyway.

[–] joker125 3 points 8 months ago

Yep!

Why lower profits when you can keep on chugging?

I really hope at some point it catches up with the corporations without anything resembling an economic crash.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 8 months ago

IDK if streaming is a good example. Seems like streaming costs were under calculated and streaming services are adjustingntonreality. NPR talked about how previously, before streaming was anything, movie productions would get kick backs for movies in the theaters, tv spots, movie purchases and rentals. Theater's are still alive,but not doing well and rentals have had a dynamic shift. No more renting so much as streaming, which is technically rather cheap. The issue stems from the small amount of kick backs going to the show/movie productions since it was a new market. Now, movie productions want more money from streaming since their other sources of income have diminished which is where the streaming cost increases are probably coming from.

[–] CascadianGiraffe 2 points 8 months ago

I can confirm. Was in retail management until recently. Owner regularly boasted about how much money he made because he saw the beginning of the pandemic and bought a ton of product at the low prices they were at before prices started going up. Then raised prices to be 30% more than the competition raised prices.

"People expect prices to go up, but they won't be able to shop around so they will pay the extra. With all the shipping and package theft problems nobody will trust Amazon so it doesn't matter if we are charging nearly twice as much. They want what we have and they will pay the price we set."

When I left they were still nearly double the price of LOCAL competition and still pulling profits. The thought is even if 30% of the customers leave and go somewhere else, with the margin being ridiculously high we still came out on top.

"We make money by being the first to raise our prices and the last to lower them."

"We" was actually the owner.

Bonuses were "Not Available" due to rising cost of operating during a pandemic. Raises were limited to cost of living increases based on state adjustments (which were far lower than our area).